It has 4 perpendicular lines, or 4 equal sides. However, not all lines are perfectly equal!
No. Each of its four sides is perpendicular to two other sides.
Any shape, other than a triangle can have a pair of perpendicular sides.
The adjacent sides of a square are perpendicular.
Sometimes, only if it is a square.
A triangle with a right angle in it is the only case in which a triangle can have perpendicular lines. Triangles themselves cannot be perpendictular unless you are referring to one of the sides being perpendicular to a certain line.
No, a square has four perpendicular sides.
No. The diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular only if the rhombus is a square.
Sometimes, only if it is a square.
Yes. Squares only contain 90 degree angles, so all sides are perpendicular to the adjacent sides and parallel to the opposite one.
Yes.
A triangle with a right angle in it is the only case in which a triangle can have perpendicular lines. Triangles themselves cannot be perpendictular unless you are referring to one of the sides being perpendicular to a certain line.
No, a square is not a perpendicular.
No. All segments have only one perpendicular bisector.
If you are talking about the diagonals of a quadrilateral, the only quadrilateral that have diagonals that are perpendicular and bisect each other is a square, because a rectangle has bisecting diagonals, while a rhombus has perpendicular diagonals. And a square fits in both of these categories.
I suppose. All of a square's sides are perpendicular.
Sure, a square is a rectangle and the diagonals of a square are perpendicular.
The diagonals of a square are perpendicular whereas the diagonals of a rectangle are not perpendicular.